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Recycled Calendar Coasters

Remember when I made our headboard and I told you how I found that beautiful otomi fabric on ebay? Well the seller also sent me a calendar with all kinds of gorgeous images of otomi fabric. It was so pretty I didn’t want to throw it away, but a girl only needs so many paper calendars. Since I’ve been working on prettying up my home office with exotic fabrics like otomi and suzanis, I thought recycling the images onto some coasters would be a nice touch.I know I showed you how to do this once before with the Matryoshka and Owl Coasters, but I’ll show you How to Make Mod Podge Coasters again after the jump. It’s so crazy easy!

Recycled Calendar Tile Coasters

1. Acquire some inexpensive tiles, the standard 4″ is perfect for coasters. I was driving back from the desert one day and noticed a random tile outlet by the highway. I stopped in and was able to pick up a box of 80 (80!) yellow 4″ tiles for $10. Sweet! Also grab an old calendar, greeting cards, anything made with pretty paper.

2. Trace your tile onto the paper around the image you’d like to preserve:

3. Cut out all of your images. You can be a little sloppy for this first cut:

4. Go back to all of them with an x-acto knife on a self-healing cutting matt and trim them down so they are a bit smaller on all sides then the face of your tile. If you want a bigger border of tile around them, just cut them smaller. If you’re like me, you’ll find that your husband used all of your blades to scrape the black off his designer sneakers in some strange display of sneaker-obsession and have to use scissors. blerg.

6. Center your paper onto the tile. Gently push out any bubbles with your fingers from the center to the sides. Sometimes the ink can smear if you press the bubble with your oily fingers, so better to use a cloth to smush them out. Watch the tiles for a minute, they may seem to have no bubbles at first, and then a minute later they show up, so keep your eye on them and get all those bubbles out:Then let them dry for at least 20 minutes.

7. As you’re letting them dry, cut out some cork or felt for the bases:

8. Give the tiles one more coat of mod podge:Let them dry for 20 minutes.

9. Glue your cork to the back of the tiles. This time I used Aleene’s Clear Gel Tacky Glue which works miracles always and should be in any crafters cabinet:

10. Spray the entire surface of the tiles with a sealant. Whenever people complain about a mod podge project getting messed up, it is because they skipped this step. I can’t stress enough how important this is. Though the mod podge feels hard it does not fully cure and will melt if you put a hot cup on it. You must SEAL IT. You can use polyurethane spray, but I recently picked up some of Aleene’s spray acrylic sealer and I love the shiny gloss finish.

Done! Wrap with a ribbon. Since I have 80 of these yellow tiles guess what everyone I know is getting as hostess gifts all summer long?